4 Indispensable Rules For Better English Pronunciation

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Today, on LetThemTalkTV.

Not only will you learn how to improve your English pronunciation

with some indispensable rules, but you will also learn.

Why we pronounce English as we do.

I promise that by the end of this video, you will see the

English language in a new light.

Once you follow the logic, you will be able to apply this method to English

as a whole rather than learning the pronunciation one word at a time.

This is a game changer.

And if you're ready, then let's do it

The first thing is to learn the spelling and pronunciation rules.

Yes, there are some rules.

It sounds obvious, but when we are teaching English pronunciation, we

often focus on the irregular because.

There are so many exceptions.

As I'm sure you know, this word is pronounced [WIMMIN] SWORD has a silent W.

It's ENOUGH.

But THOUGH, and I've made many videos on this subject, but did you know that more

than 70% of English words follow rules?

And let's have a look at just a few of them.

There are many more, but here, just one or two words ending.

T U R E are pronounced cha, creature moisture, feature capture.

Now you say the sentence, they'll capture the creature in the picture in the future.

Very good.

There are one or two exceptions.

Mature was the only one I could think of right now.

A G E words are pronounced IDGE manage average advantage.

Package Vintage heritage.

Say this sentence: they managed the storage of the vintage package.

However, words of one syllable are pronounced.

Age page, wage, rage, age.

There are very few exceptions to the rule.

I can think of reportage.

But that's not an everyday word.

If you have one vowel before a double consonant, then it's

pronounced as a short vowel.

I remind you that the long vows are also the names of the letters, A E I O U, But

these vowels have short versions, . , a e, i, o u Let's look at some examples.

Apple Battle, Better written robber billing.

Say the sentence,

The story of the battle for the apple was written on the robber.

And that's why we double a consonant to make it a short vowel, write as one T,

but written two ts bite bitten et cetera.

The double consonant shortens the vowel.

Words ending I T Y are pronounced itty.

Say this sentence, The density of gravity in the city.

The only exception I can think of is fruity, where the I is silent

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How'd you pronounce this?

I lived there for four years.

Did you pronounce FOR and FOUR the same?

Native speakers will usually pronounce them differently.

In English, there are substance words and helper words.

The helper words, just lubricate the sentence and make it

conform to the rules of grammar.

While the substance words convey the meaning.

Look at this sentence and you tell me which are the substance words

and which are the helper words.

The pilots and the passengers are arriving for a conference.

The pilots and the passengers are arriving for a conference.

How would you pronounce it?

So PILOT PASSANGERS ARRIVING CONFERENCE are substance words.

THE AND OR A ARE are the helper words.

Now these helper words have two pronunciations.

A strong form and a weak form.

For example, FOR is a strong form and [FEH].

Is the weak form of FOR and native speakers will usually use the weak form

The exceptions are

So I'd pronounce this sentence like this.

The pilot and the passengers are arriving for a conference.

Now you try it.

These words on the screen have both strong and weak forms.

I'm not going to talk about all the weak forms because I've already made

more than one video on them, but in this video, we'll just look at three of them,

So FOR is usually pronounced [fe].

So how would you pronounce these sentences?

For a long time, I did it for many reasons.

This is for Alice.

Very good.

Very good.

By the way, for FOR and for all the weak forms, there is a common

misconception that these are slang forms or informal speech.

Not at all.

They are used in the most formal of situations too.

It's all about the message and making sure that the listener hears the

words of substance in the sentence.

Let's just look at two more cases.

Here's your challenge.

How do you pronounce this sentence?

The criminal was sentenced to two years in prison.

Once again, if you pronounced TO and TWO the same

Most of the time you'll pronounce two as [TE].

The criminal was sentenced to two years in prison.

Did you notice?

I also said WEZ for WAS, which is another week form.

Okay.

Try saying these sentence.

Give it to me.

Give it to me.

I don't want to do it

to be on, to be, That is the question

Now that's interesting.

Normally you'd pronounce it [TE].

Because of course you want to emphasize BE and not the infinitive marker TO.

However, if you are giving the soliloquy really slowly, then you

have no choice but to say TO because you cannot linger on the [TE].

You can't say TE........

be or not to be.

No.

That not at all.

You can't.

So that's why you'll hear both versions.

But non theatrically, it'll always be to be on, not to be.

Even as a prefix TO is pronounced [TE] today.

Tomorrow, I promise you a third example and here it is: OF is

pronounced [ev] Say this sentence.

It's part of the problem.

The last day of the holiday.

Think of something original.

The reason I mentioned this is because sometimes non-native

speakers say OF but it sounds like OFF, which can be confusing.

So try to say [EV] if possible.

Let's move on to the next rule, but you might see that it's connected

to the weak forms rule, and this is the correct pronunciation of TH.

This will be easier for speakers of some languages that have the TH

sound such as Spanish and Greek and Arabic, while many others don't.

German, French, Japanese, they don't have that TH sound.

However, whatever your first language, you should be aware that there are two TH

sounds, the voiced TH and the unvoiced TH and there are rules for when to pronounce

each one first of all, let's look at how to pronounce them very briefly.

The voiced TH has this phonetic symbol and you'll find it in words

such as the THIS, THAT in order to pronounce it, make an uh, sound.

Okay?

Can you do that?

Uh, okay.

The vibration comes to the back, the.

And it's making a humming sound.

And now continue with this sound.

But, but then make the sound come from the front of your

mouth and between your teeth.

And then say the th words, uh, this, that, then you got it.

But the unvoiced th just exhale like, Then put your tongue between

your teeth and blow think athlete.

Thank you.

Okay.

You got it.

Try that at home.

But how do you know, but how'd you know when a word is a voiced?

Th or an unvoiced TH And as I said, there is a connection with

weak forms we just talked about.

Have you seen it yet?

If you remember, I said that some helper words have weak forms.

Okay.

Well, have you ever noticed that the common helper words with TH are

pronounced with a voiced TH while substance words have an unvoiced,

TH by substance words, I mean nouns, adjectives, verbs, and ad verbs.

So, for example, the helper TH words include this, That these, those them

themselves, they, that they're therefore either neither another together.

Other though, although notice that that them than themselves, not only have a

voiced TH but also have a weak form.

Than, for example, is thehn.

In addition to the helper words, you'll also find the voiced TH

in family names: mother, father, brother, and in words ending t h e.

You have a bath, but to bathe a breath, but to breathe cloth, but to

clothe teeth, but teethe to loathe.

To loathe, by the way, is a synonym of to hate

swathe.

And a swathe means a large area of something.

So, for example, swathes of the rainforest have been destroyed in recent years,

but in almost every other case, it's an unvoiced TH a thought, a thing thistle.

The theater a thief.

Thin strength, apathy, birthday, truth, health, thick, thin, footpath wealth.

Exceptions.

There are a few voiced TH sounds amongst substance words.

For example, weather to gather.

Feather not many.

And very rarely a TH is pronounced as a T.

These usually occur when two words merge into one or with real names,

as I'm sure Mr.

Thompson the goatherder in the lighthouse in Thailand will tell you.

Sometimes when we are talking about pronunciation, we tend to

focus on the individual words.

However, equally important is the rhythm of the phrase.

My final tip today is to focus on the phrase rather than the

words, and in order do that.

You must be kind of blind as to how the phrase is written on the page.

So instead, fix your mind on these things.

Where are the consonants?

Where are the vowels and which is, or which are the most

important words in the phrase?

Let's look at a sentence.

How do you pronounce

this?

Often learners of English will try to pronounce a phrase like

this, separating every word and give equal weight to each word.

Was it a car or a cat I saw?

Was it a car or a cat I saw?

But a native speaker will end on a vowel and start with a consonant,

and if you do that, then the phrase looks something like this.

Was it a car, a cat?

note also that, do we have OR followed by A, And in most forms of

British English, we would pronounce r.

As R without the R sound, but because the next word begins

with a vowel, we add the R sound.

So this is called the linking R, and there's also a linking R with car and

OR, and the words we want to stress in the sentence, are car and cat.

So finally the phrase sounds something like this.

Was it a car a cat I saw?

Was it a car a cat I saw was it a car a cat I saw?

And if you haven't noticed it yet, that was a palindrome.

Okay.

Here are a couple more examples.

Say this sentence,

The words we want to emphasize in the sentence may differ.

Do you want to stress prison?

Or five months?

But let's say it's both.

So then we'd say he'd only been in prison for five months.

Notice we use, he'd only only been in prison for five months.

Notice we use [FEH] and not FOR as we saw earlier.

One more example.

Now what do we stress here?

It could be oat milk, if that's a thing that you've run out of and not anything

else, or it could be run out of, if that's the only thing you're talking about.

You're discussing oat milk, so let's stress the run out of, and

by the way, in phrasal verbs, we stress the second word normally.

So get up, break down, put off, et cetera.

So how would you say the sentence then

We've run outta oat milk.

Okay.

And if you're hitting in the consonants first, it reads like

this, We've run out of vo milk.

In English, we like to have the consonant vowel consonant combinations, and

that's why we have the linking R so as to avoid two consecutive vowels.

But you'll also add an R when one is not there, such as in this sentence.

I saw a film today.

SAW ends in [OR], and it's followed by another vowel and we

don't like that so we add an R.

I saw a film.

This is called an intrusive R.

Sometimes we add a Y sound for harmony too.

When there's no Y.

I always, I am a man.

We are the champions.

Three apples.

Even within words you'll hear, some speakers will say

Opinion instead of opinion.

Not every speaker adds an intrusive R or an intrusive Y in fact, some don't

like it at all, but it makes sense to do it, to maintain the melody and

the rhythm of the English language.

So why not?

. Sometimes we add consonants, sometimes we take them away.

Look at these sentences and tell me how you would pronounce them.

Get back, get down.

Let me trust John.

So leave out the T when it proceeds a word starting with a consonant.

Get back is ok when we're speaking slowly

but when we're speaking quickly in order to maintain the

consonant vowel consonant rhythm we'll skip it

so it becomes get back, get down.

Let me trust John.

This even happens with individual words.

Sixth, Who can say that?

Sixth.

So when speaking quickly, may sound like six, just the same as six.

This is the sixth time I've seen you today.

Clothes, clothes.

, that's difficult, but it's often reduced like CLOSE in fluent speech.

So you hear many native speakers saying, I put on my CLOSE.

You can hardly tell the difference.

I put on my clothes, I put on my close.

Do note that there are still consonant clusters in English

and many exceptions to this rule.

So for example, the plural.

S you've got consonants before that, then you'll probably pronounce them

depending on the context masks.

Okay.

You have to say it like that.

Or crisps.

So forget about what's written on the page and focus on the pronunciation

of helper words, weak forms, and the TH , on regular pronunciations and the

correct rhythm and the stress of English.

That's all for now.

Stay mellow.

See you next time.